Stephen Frazier wrote:
Back then we used 1 a character year, 0-9 was 1950-1959, A-J was 1960-1969 and K-T was 1970-1979. If you want to know why look at the punch card code. 0-9 was a single punch. A-J was a + (12 punch) with a 0-9. K-T was a - (11 punch) with a 0-9. We knew that this would break in 1980 but we thought by then we would not be using cards any more. :)
However VM came along and now we have virtual cards in our RDR and PUN. :)
I have real cards (5081's) in my shirt pocket. I thought I had a life time supply but someone cleaned out a supply cabinet here and now I only have about 2 boxes left and "no" that isn't enough to share :-P

Jim

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Jeff Henry wrote:
On 3/9/07, *Mike Walter* <[EMAIL PROTECTED] <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>> wrote:

    ... and IBM has better things to work on than something 35 years
    from now, ...


That's what everybody was saying back in 1965 about the y2k problem. :-)

And because they said that, them mainframe thingies caught on! There was a reason they were so tight with those extra bytes for the "19" way back then! It might have had consequence, but I'm not sure it was the wrong choice _at the time_.



--
Jim Bohnsack
Cornell University
(607) 255-1760
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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